Newspaper Page Text
Florida University
Forces Out ‘Pinup 9
GAINESVILLE, Fla. (UPI) —
Coed pinup Pamela Brewer said
today she was just a nude pawn
in a power struggle between the
University of Florida and an
off-campus humor magazine.
”1 was used said the 38-24-36
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brunette who was forced out of
the university Wednesday after
a second photograph of her re
clining nude on a Persion rug
appeared in Charlatan.
"I’m pretty upset about it,”
said Pamela. “Bven some of
the school officials said they
felt sorry for me because I was
being used by the university to
get at Charlatan.”
Charlatan, a slick-page hu
mor magazine published off
campus finds little favor
among university officials, she
said. The officials certainlj
read it, though, because every
time her nude picture appeared
there were swift repercussions.
The first time, last month,
the university called a council
and put Pam on probation after
an all-night hearing centered a
round her picture—showing her,
bare breasted and smiling, re
clining on a Persian rug. She
was cited for indiscreet behav
ior.
The second time, this week,
the picture was much milder
but the punishment wasn’t. The
photograph, taken the same
time as the first, showed Pam
nude again but her arms were
strategically placed.
After the second picture ap
peared, Pam said, she was
"withdrawn” from school by
her parents who were told by
school officials “if I were not
withdrawn I would be ex
pelled.”
Pam said her parents hadn’t
pulled the rug from under her
feet. She said they decided to
withdraw her “because if I
were expelled I’d never get into
another college."
The attractive sophomore had
no immediate plans to return to
her home in Springfield, Va.
“I don’t know what the future
will bring,” she said. “You
know, I got a few offers during
the first controversy and I’m
checking them out. Or I may
even try to get back into Flori
da next September.”
Pamela, who said her grades
skidded to marginal during the
uproar, has received offers to
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dance In several cities, "not
striptease, though. At least 1
don’t think so.”
She said she has a good job
and plans to stay in Gainesville
at least until this summer. She
is director of advertising and
exchanges for Charlatan, which
she said “has been having an
upswing in circulation lately.”
Real Collector
CAIRO (UPI) — Some peo
ple collect garbage but Cairo po
lice say they have caught one
citizen who collected the garb
age cans as well. They say he
was found with 28 brimming
cans he collected on his morn
ing rounds in the Gamalia dis
trict, and confessed he was af
ter the cans. The police didn’t
say what he did with the gar
bage.
Seal Census
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) —
There’s quite a zoo off the Cali
fornia coast.
The coast and offshore islands
of the state are inhabitated by
an estimated 22,000 sea lions,
1.000 harbor seals and 3,500 nor
them elephant seals, as well as
about 600 sea otters, once near
ly extinct.
Thursday, March 23, 1967 Griffin Daily News
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(Kiwanls Photo by E. F. Savage)
Pancake Money
Dr. D. M. Baird (1), president of the Kiwanis Club, presents a check for $1,941
to school superintendent George Patrick, Jr., for school lunches for needy stu
dents. The money was raised during the annual Kiwanis pancake sale.
Book Might Have
Saved His Life
By LOUIS CASSELS
United Press International
Last Year, in a quiet English
village, a retired clergyman
took his own life.
He was old, sick and lonely.
But it was not for those reasons
that he found it impossible to go
on living. He was pushed over
the line by a sense of despair
which afflicts many other
humble Christians in the world
today.
He had been reading about
the "new theology” and watch
ing its exponents rattle off their
glib denials on television. He
concluded that men with such
impressive degrees and titles
must know more than he did.
And if they were right—if Jesus
did not really rise from the
dead and the New Testament
was only a bundle of myths—
then his life’s work as a
minister of the Gospel had been
founded upon a lie.
Had a Friend
His suicide would have
attraced little attention outside
his own village but for one fact.
He had a friend named J. B.
Phillips.
Canon Phillips is the great
Anglican scholar whose “New
Testament in Modern English”
Is widely regarded as one of the
finest Bible translations ever
made.
He has written a new book
called “Ring of Truth” (Mac
millan). It was written, he says,
in anger—anger at “some of the
intellectuals who write so
cleverly and devastatingly about
the Christian faith” but who
“appear to have no personal
knowledge of the living God.”
“Ring of Truth” is the kind of
book that might have saved the
old English clergyman from his
act of ultimate despair. It is a
personal testimony of faith so
strong, so confident, so well
informed, so devoid of supersti
tion of obscurantism, that the
reader can only find it
contagious.
Not Skeptical
It will be particularly enlight
ening to anyone who has gained
the impression that all contem
porary theologians and Biblical
scholars subscribe to the radical
skepticism of the Rudolf Bult
manns and John Robinsons.
Canon Phillips can match
Intellectual credentials with any
scholar. But 25 years of
studying the text of the New
Testament have not left him
skeptical of its reliability.
On the contrary.
“As the years have passed,”
he writes, “my conviction has
grown that the New Testament
is in a quite special sense
inspired. It is not magical, nor
is it faultless: Human beings
wrote it. But by something
which I would not hesitate to
describe as a miracle, there is
a concentration upon that area
of inner truth which is
fundamental and ageless. That,
I believe, is the reason why
millions of people have heard
the voice of God speaking to
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PEN-RAISED BIRDS on preserves like Nilo Farms pro
vide another avenue of hunting hunting for marksmen and have the
proved that preserve can be as thrilling as
real thing.
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A MALE CARRIER of girls’ schoolbooks, Gary Clark
finds it hard to keep the schoolboy tradition when you're
the only male enrolled in a school of nursing. Heaping
them on are three of his 7« classmates at St. Joseph’s
School of Nursing in Alton, III., from left, Carol Ruff,
Linda Brockgreltens and Patricia Hft»lF"dr
16
them through these seemingly
artless pages.”
Extreme Position
Canon Phillips says he "could
not possibly hold the extreme
’fundamentalist’ position” which
looks upon the very words of
the bible has having been
infallibly inspired by God.
But he is equally emphatic in
rejecting the other extreme of
interpretation, which treats
New Testament stories as myths
rather than accounts of actual,
historical events.
“I have read, in Greek and
Latin, scores of myths. But I
did not find the slightest flavor
of myth here (in the Greek text
of the New Testament).
"There is no hysteria, no
careful working for effect, and
no attempt at collusion. These
are not embroidered tales: the
material is cut to the bone. One
sensed again and again that
understatement which we have
been taught to think is more
'British’ than Oriental. There is
an almost childlike candor and
simplicity, and the total effect
is tremendous.
“No man could ever have
invented such a character as
Jesus. No man could have set
down such artless and vulnera
ble accounts as these unless
some real event lay behind
them.”
There is no doubt in Canon
Phillips’ mind about the nature
of the event.
“The resurrection of Jesus
was, and indeed is, historical
fact,” he concludes. “I suppose
I have studied the relevant
documents, commentaries and
attempts to controvert the
whole story as fully as most
men, and I am utterly
convinced that this thing really
happened.”